This document discusses natural nanomaterials and provides examples. It defines natural nanomaterials as materials from nature that have remarkable properties due to their inherent nanostructure, without human modification. Some examples of natural nanomaterials mentioned include bone, the lotus leaf, gecko feet, and the wings of the Morpho rhetenor butterfly. The document explains how the nanostructure of these materials allows for properties like self-cleaning, adhesion, and iridescence.
1.
NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit in Nanotechnologies
Chapter 2‐
Nanoscience in
Nature
MODULE 1‐ Fundamental concepts in nanoscience and nanotechnologies
Written by Luisa Filipponi and Duncan Sutherland
Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Centre
Aarhus University, Denmark
January 2010
Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 unless indicated in text or figure captions.
2. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
Contents
What is a natural nanomaterial? .................................................................................................... 3
Overview of natural nanomaterials ...........................................................................................................................
3
Learning from Nature ................................................................................................................................................
5
Detailed description of some natural nanomaterials ..................................................................... 7
Bone ...........................................................................................................................................................................
7
Lotus leaf ................................................................................................................................................................. 0
1
Gecko ....................................................................................................................................................................... 2
1
Morpho rhetenor ..................................................................................................................................................... 4
1
This document has been created in the context of the NANOYOU project (WP4 Task 4.1). All information is
provided “as is” and no guarantee or warranty is given that the information is fit for any particular purpose. The
user thereof uses the information at its sole risk and liability. The document reflects solely the views of its
authors. The European Commission is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained
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3. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
Chapter 2: Nanoscience in Nature
This Chapter introduces the concept of “natural nanomaterial” and illustrates with some detail few examples that
can be introduced in class.
What is a natural nanomaterial?
All materials can in principle be described at the nanoscale. By natural nanomaterials here we mean materials that
belong to the natural world (animal and mineral), without human modification or processing, and that have
remarkable properties because of their inherent nanostructure.
The chemical identity and properties of a substance depend upon its molecular structure. The nanostructure of a
biological material is due to its supramolecular organization: arrangement of tens to hundreds of molecules into
shapes and forms in the nanoscale range. The interaction of light, water and other materials with these
nanostructures give the natural materials sticking properties which can be appreciated at the macro scale.
Natural nanomaterials provide an inspiring way of bringing nanoscience in class. Many natural materials that
students will be very familiar with ought their properties to nanostructures in their composition. It can be really
enlightening to realize that common natural materials, such as feathers and spider silk, or materials that we use
every day, such as paper and clay, have properties that depend not only on their chemistry but also on their
nanostructure.
Overview of natural nanomaterials
We have hundreds of examples of nanoscience under our eyes daily, from geckos that walk up side down on a
ceiling, apparently against gravity, to butterflies with iridescent colours, to fireflies that glow at night. In Nature we
encounter some outstanding solutions to complex problems in the form of fine nanostructures to which precise
functions are associated.
Here is a short list of some natural nanomaterials; it is not exhaustive, but the interest teacher can find more
information in the Bibliography at the end of this Module.
‐ Nanoparticles from natural erosion and volcanic activity. Nanoparticles are part of our mineral world since they
are naturally produced during erosion and volcanic explosions.
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4. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
‐ Minerals, such as clays, are nanostructured. Clays are a type of layered silicates that are characterized by a fine
2D crystal structure; among these, mica has been the most studied. Mica is made up of large sheets of silicate held
together by relatively strong bonds. Smectic clays, such as montmorillonite, have relatively weak bonds between
layers. Each layer consists of two sheets of silica held together by cations such as Li+, Na+, K+ and Ca2+. The presence
of the cations is necessary for compensating the overall negative charge of the single layers. The layers are 20‐200
nm in diameter laterally and come into aggregates called tactoids, which can be about 1 nm or more thick.
Naturally occurring clays include montmorillonite (MMT) and hecrite. The fine nanostructure of clays determines
their properties. when water is added, the clay swells , but the volume change is rather unusual, it is several times
the original volume due to the “opening” of the layered structure by the water molecules that replace the cations.
Clays swelling is a significant factor in soil stability and must to be taken into account in building roads etc.
‐ Natural colloids, such as milk, blood (liquid colloids), fog (aerosol type), gelatine (gel‐type). In these materials
nanoparticles are dispersed in the medium (liquid or gas) but do not form a solution, rather a colloid. All these
materials have the characteristic of scattering light and often their colour (such in the case of blood and milk) are
due to the scattering of light by the nanoparticles that make them up.
The EXPERIMENT A in the NANOYOU Experiment module investigates natural colloids (milk and
gelatine) and how their properties are connected to their nanostructure. A gold colloid is the
subject of EXPERIMENT C in the NANOYOU Experiment module.
‐ Mineralized natural materials, such as shells, corals and bones. Many of these materials are formed by calcium
carbonate crystals that self‐assemble together with other natural materials, such as polymers, to form fascinating
three‐dimensional architectures. For instance a shell is grown by a layer of cells that first lays down a coating of
protein supported by a polysaccharide polymer like chitin. The proteins act like a nano‐assembly mechanism to
control the growth of carbon carbonate crystals. Around each crystal remains a honeycomb‐like matrix of protein
and chitin. This relatively “flexible envelope” is fundamental for the mechanical properties of the shell and mitigate
cracking. The size of each crystal is around 100 nm. The result is that the nacre of mollusc shells has extraordinary
physical properties (strength, resistance to compression etc.)
‐ Materials like skin, claws, beaks, feathers, horns, hair. These materials are made largely by very flexible proteins
like keratin, elastin and collagen. Keratins have a large content of glycine and alanine. This leads to β‐sheets that
can bond strongly one with another in an aligned fashion. Fibrous keratin molecules can twist around each other
to form helical intermediate filaments. Similarly collagen (not related to keratin in term of primary structure) has a
high percentage of glycine, and forms flexible triple‐helix structures. In addition to intra and intermolecular bonds,
keratins have numerous cysteins that can form stable di‐sulphide bonds. The amount of cysteins in the protein
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5. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
determines the strength and rigidity of the material; keratin in human hair for instance contains about 14% of
cysteins. Materials like nails, hooves and claws have higher percentage of cysteins.
‐ Paper and cotton. Both are made mainly of cellulose. The high strength, durability and absorbency of cotton are
due to the nanoscale arrangement of the fibres.
‐ Insect wings and opals. The colours seen in opals and butterflies in directly connected to their fine structure,
which reveals packed nanostructures that act like a diffraction grating and induces iridescence. In the case of opals
this is due to packed silica spheres in the nanometre range, uniform in size and arranged in layers. Butterflies own
the colour of their wings often to pigments that absorb specific colours; in some species, like the beautiful Morpho
rhetenor, colours are due to the presence in the wings of nanostructures which are photonic crystals. This example
is discussed in more details in the next session of this Chapter.
‐ Spider silk. Silk is the material with the highest known strength, about five times that of steel of the same weight.
The extraordinary properties of spider silk are due to the proteins that make up the silk (mainly fibroin) and its
supramolecular organization which is at the nanoscale level.
‐ Lotus leaf and similar (Nasturtium). The nanostructure of the leaf in these plants is responsible for their
extraordinary surface properties and the ability to “self‐clean”. This example is discussed in more details in the
next session of this Chapter.
‐ Gecko feet. The structure of the Gecko feet is an amazing example of relationship between function and
nanostructure. The ability of geckos to walk upside‐down, against gravity, even on wet or dirty surfaces is intimitily
connected to its feet nanostructure. This example is also discussed in more details in the next session of this
Chapter.
Learning from Nature
Natural nanomaterials are of interest not only for understanding (and appreciating) the amazing properties of
biological materials but also to gather inspiration for the design and engineering of new materials with advanced
properties.
The physical origins of the remarkable properties of many biological materials are due to complex, often
hierarchical structure1. They are characterized by a surprising level of adaptability and multifunctionality. These
materials can provide a model for designing radically improved artificial materials for many applications, such as
solar cells, fuel cells, textiles, drug delivery systems etc.
1
Hierarchical structures are those structures that are synthesized at different levels of complexity by alternating
growth conditions.
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6. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
What is even more inspiring is the notion that in Nature some very simple laws apply:
1. Nature runs on sunlight and uses only the energy it needs. Natural nanomaterials are extremely energy efficient!
2. Nature fits form to function and recycles everything‐waste products are minimized in Nature!
3. Nature rewards cooperation although it encourages diversity and local expertise.
The field of material engineering that is devoted at trying to fabricate artificial materials that mimic natural ones is
conventionally called biomimetics. Nanoscience is a fundamental component of biomimetics.
Natural nanomaterials are inspirational for the engineering of new materials with advanced
functionalities. In Chapter 5 “Overview of nanomaterials” we will see some examples. Below is a
short list of biomimetic materials inspired from natural ones.
Biomimetic material….. …inspired from
Polymers Sub‐structure of nacre
Structural elements Wood, ligaments and bone
Electrical conduction Eels and nervous system
Photoemission Deep‐sea fish and glow worms
Photonic crystals Butterfly and bird wings
Hydrophobic surfaces Lotus leaf and human skin
Adhesives Gecko’s feet
High tensile strength fibre Spider silk
Artificial intelligence and computing Human brain
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7. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
Detailed description of some natural nanomaterials
We will now describe in some detail some fascinating natural nanostructures, and explain how their natural
nanostructure is responsible for their properties (like adhesiveness, strength, flexibility, colour etc.)
Bone
If you think about it, the unique properties of bone are a list of apparent contradictions: rigid, but flexible;
lightweight, but solid enough to support tissue growth; mechanically strong, but porous. Bone can withstand
weight without breaking. Its compressive strength is about twice its tensional strength. These outstanding
properties are the result of bone’s complex hierarchical structure and composition: bone material is made of a
composite of collagen (mainly type I) fibrils reinforced with calcium phosphate particles (hydroxiapatite2).
From a mechanical point of view many bones such as the femoral head can be described as a “sandwich” structure
with a dense external shell (cortical bone) and a spongy interior (cancellous bone). In cancellous bone, only about
20% of the volume is filled with bone material, the rest is made of bone marrow. Cortical bone is made of fibrils
regularly arranged (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. (a) Section through a femoral head showing the shell of
cortical bone (C) and the spongious bone (S) inside. (b) Enlargement of
the cortical bone region revealing several osteons (O) corresponding
to blood vessels surrounded by concentric layers of bone material. (c)
picture of a single trabeculum from the spongious bone region. (d)
Further enlargement showing the lamellar and fibrillar material
texture around an osteocyte lacuna (OC) as visible in scanning electron
microscopy (see white arrow). The lamellae are formed by bundles of
mineralized collagen fibrils (insert). (Reprinted from: Fratzel et al.,
Journal of Material Chemistry (2004) 14, 2115‐2123. Reproduced by
permission of the Royal Society of Chemistry).
The fibrils consist of an assembly of 300 nm long and 1.5 nm
thick collagen molecules which are deposited by the osteoblasts
(bone‐forming cells) into the extracellular space and the self‐
assemble into fibrils. Adjacent fibrils molecules are staggered
along the axial direction by about D= 67nm (see Figure 2),
2
Hydroxiapatite: Ca5(PO4)3OH
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8. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
generating a characteristic pattern of gap zones with 35 nm length and overlap zones with 32 nm length within the
fibril.
Figure 2. Self‐assembly of collagen fibrils. (a) Procollagen molecule after
excretion from the cell. (b) Collagen after cleavage of the propeptide
ends. (c) Parallel self‐assembly with a staggering period of D. (d)
Periodic density variation along the fibril axis, resulting from the
staggering. In the stripes labeled O, there is an overlap of all molecules.
In the stripes labeled G (gap region), one molecule out of five is missing
and the density is accordingly smaller. (Reprinted from: Fratz et al.,
progress in Materials Science (2007) 52 (8), 1263‐1334, with permission
from Elsevier).
Collagen fibrils are filled and coated by tiny mineral crystals of hydroxiapatite. These are mainly flat plates mostly
arranged parallel to each other and parallel to the fibril main axis. Crystals occur at regular intervals along the
fibrils, with an approximately repeat distance of 67 nm. In mammalian species bone mineral crystals have a
thickness of 2‐4 nm (Figure 3).
Figure 3. Sketch of the arrangement of mineral particles in
collagen fibrils. Mineral particles are typically very thin objects
(2–4 nm) and aligned with the collagen matrix. (Image credit:
Fratzel et al., Journal of Material Chemistry (2004) 14, 2115‐
2123. Reproduced by permission of the Royal Society of
Chemistry).
To summarize, bone is formed of a soft organic matrix (collagen) reinforced by an anisotropic stiff inorganic
component (crystals of hydroxiapatite). These two components are assembled in a hierarchic structure which is
organized at the nanoscale level. It is this nanoscale hierarchic organization that allows bone to tolerate small
microfractures that arise from normal activity and dissipate deformation energy without propagation of the crack.
Hydroxiapatite is a rigid material which is not capable of dissipating much energy; therefore collagen is believed to
have a major role in the structural properties of bone (elastic and plastic deformation). Figure 4 illustrate the role
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9. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
of collagen during bone deformation. Older bone, which is more mineralized and thus has a larger percentage of
hydroxiapatite, is stiffer and breaks more easily.
Figure 4. Schematic model for bone deformation in response to external tensile load at three levels in the structural
hierarchy: at the tissue level (left), fibril array level (center), and mineralized collagen fibrils (right). The stiff mineralized
fibrils deform in tension and transfer the stress between adjacent fibrils by shearing in the thin layers of extrafibrillar matrix
(white dotted lines in the center plot show direction of shear in the extrafibrillar matrix). The fibrils are covered with
extrafibrillar mineral particles, shown only over a selected part of the fibrils (red hexagons) so as not to obscure the internal
structure of the mineralized fibril. Right: within each mineralized fibril, the stiff mineral platelets deform in tension and
transfer the stress between adjacent platelets through shear in the interparticle collagen matrix (red dashed lines indicate
shearing qualitatively and do not imply homogeneous deformation). (Reprinted from: Fratz et al., progress in Materials
Science (2007) 52 (8), 1263‐1334, with permission from Elsevier).
Bone is a “perfect” nanocomposite which is used as a model for polymer composites reinforced for
instance with nanomaterials such as carbon nanotubes. Polymer composites and their applications
are covered in Chapter 5 of Module 1 (“Overview of nanomaterials”).
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10. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
Lotus leaf
The Lotus plant (Nelumbo Nucifera) is a native Asian plant which has the distinct property of having its leaves
particularly clean even if its natural habitat is muddy. For this reason this plant is considered sacred is some
cultures and a sign of purity. The leaves of the Lotus plant have the outstanding characteristic of totally repelling
water because they are superhydrophobic (Figure 5). The consequence is that water droplets roll off the leaf
surface and in doing so it to drag dirt away from it, as in the illustration (Figure 7). This effect, called “self‐cleaning”
renders the Lotus leaf clean and resistant to dirt. The same effect is found in other leaves such as those of
Tropeaolum‐ Nasturtium and some Canas, and in some animals suck as the water strider.
Figure 5. /Left to right): A Lotus leaf (iNANO, Aarhus University, Creative Commons ShareAlike 3.0), Tropeaolum‐Nasturtium
leaves (Wiki Commons, Creative Commons ShareAlike 3.0), and a water droplet resting on the surface of a nasturtium leaf
(A. Otten and S. Herminghaus, Göttingen, Germany, NISE Network, reprinted under NISE network terms and conditions).
HOW IS THIS NANO?
The surface properties of the Lotus leaf were first investigated by Wilhelm Barthlott. In 1997 he published an
important paper where he described for the first time the “Lotus effect” (a term that he later copyrighted)
responsible for the self‐cleaning properties of the Lotus leaves. In his original paper Barthlott showed that the self‐
cleaning properties of the Lotus plant is the combination of the micro‐structure of the leaves, and of the
epidermal cells on its rough surface, which are covered with wax‐crystals (Figure 6). These crystals provide a
water‐repellent layer, which is enhanced by the roughness of the surface, making it a superhydrophobic surface,
with a contact angle of about 150. The consequence is that water droplets on the surface tend to minimize the
contact between the surface and the drop, forming a nearly‐spherical droplet. Figure 6 shows the progressive
magnification of a Nasturtium leaf. In the last image on the right nanocrystals few tens of nanometres in size are
shown.
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11. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
A B C D
Figure 6. Close‐ up views at progressive magnification of a Nasturtium leaf revealing the presence of surface
nanocrystals (image on the far right). (Image credit (A): A.Snyder, Exploratorium; (B, C): A.Marshall, Stanford
University, (D): A. Otten and S. Herminghaus, Göttingen, Germany, all images are material of the NISE Network,
reprinted under NISE network terms and conditions).
The consequence is that water droplets roll off the leaf surface and in doing so it
drag dirt away from it, as in the illustration in Figure 7. This effect, called “self‐
cleaning” renders the Lotus leaf clean and resistant to dirt.
Contaminants on the surface (generally larger then the cellular structure of the
leaves) rest on the tips of the rough surface. When a water droplet rolls over the
contaminant, the droplet removes the particle from the surface of the leaf
(Figure 8).
Figure 7. Diagram summarizing the connection
between roughening and self‐cleaning. While on
smooth surfaces the particles are mainly
redistributed by water (bottom), they adhere to the
droplets surfaces on rough surfaces and are removed
from the leaves when the droplets roll off (right)
Figure 8. From left to right: graphic representation of
water droplets on a Lotus leaf, actual SEM image of a
droplet of mercury dragging dirt away on a lotus leaf.
(Image credit: by William Thielicke, Creative Commons
Attribution ShareAlike 3.0).
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12. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
The Lotus effect® has been an inspiration for several innovative materials, mainly with the aim of
inferring them self‐cleaning properties to reduce the amount of cleaning needed, with an obvious
environment benefit. This includes also textiles. This is covered in Chapter 2 of Module 2
(“Application of Nanotechnologies: Environment”). The Lotus effect® is also used in new solar‐cells
covers to increase their efficiency; this is explored in Chapter 3 of Module 2 (Application of Nanotechnologies:
Energy”).
The EXPERIMENT D in the NANOYOU Experiment module investigates the Lotus effect in real
plants and in innovative materials such as Nano‐Tex® fabric and nanoporous silicon.
Gecko
A gecko can cling virtually to any surface at any orientation; walk on smooth or rough surfaces, even upside down
on a glass surface; and walk on dirt or wet surfaces maintaining full contact and adhesion to it. As he walks, a
gecko does not secrete any sticky substance, and its feet do not have any suction‐like features (even at
microscopic sizes). The reason of the gecko’s amazing properties lies on the nanostructures that are present on his
foot.
The gecko foot has a series of small ridges called scansors which contain numerous projections called setae. Each
setae is about 100 μm long and has a diameter of about 5 μm. There are about half a million of these setae on the
feet of a gecko. Each setae is further subdivided into about a thousand 200‐nm wide projections called spatulae
(Figure 9). As a result, the total surface area of the gecko feet is enormous. The gecko spatulae are very flexible so
they essentially mould themselves into the molecular structure of any surface. The result is a strong adhesion
which is entirely due to Wan der Waals forces. A single seta can resist 200 μN of force, or ~ 10 atmospheres of
stress. The gecko case is thus a very good example on the effect of large surface area on small forces.
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13. NANOYOU Teachers Training Kit – Module 1– Chapter 2
Figure 9. Structural hierarchy of
the gecko adhesive system. (A)
Macrostructure: ventral view of a
tokay gecko (G. gecko) climbing
vertical glass. (B) Mesostructure:
ventral view of the foot, with
adhesive lamellae (scansors)
visible as overlapping pads. Note
the clean appearance of the
adhesive surface. (C)
Microstructure: roximal portion of
a single lamella, with individual
setae in an array visible. (D and E)
Nanostructure: single seta with
branched structure at upper right,
terminating in hundreds of
spatular tips. (Reprinted with
permission from: Hansen et al.,
Proocedings of the national
Academy of Science (2005), 102
(2), 386‐389. Copyright (2005)
National Academy of Science,
USA)
Another vey interesting property of geckos is that their feet don’t get dirty as they walk, even if they walk on a
surface covered with sand, dirt, water etc. Its feet stay clean even on dirty surfaces, and full adhesion is
maintained. The issue was investigated and it was found that the feet remain clean because it is more energetically
favourable for particles to be deposited on the surface rather than remain adhered to the gecko spatulae. If a
gecko walks over a dirty surface, he just needs few steps to get his feet totally clean again, and adhesion is not
compromised.
This self‐cleaning property of the gecko feet is now investigated to design new materials that stay
clean and/or can self‐clean for instance as “bio‐rubbers”. This is discussed in Chapter 5 of Module 1
(“Overview of Nanomaterials”).
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Morpho rhetenor
The wings of butterflies often display extraordinary colours which are a consequence of the wing’s surface and its
interaction with light. The wings also exhibit iridescence, which is the shift in colour of an object when observed at
different angles. The effect can easily be seen by observing a music CD.
Iridescence is a “physical colour” and it results from the interaction of light with the physical structure of the
surface. To interact with visible light those structures must be nano‐sized (visible light is between 380 and 750
nm). The interaction of light with this nano‐rough surface can lead to constructive or destructive interference. The
colour, intensity, and angles of iridescence depend on the thickness and refractive index of the substrate, and on
the incident angle and frequency of the incident light.
In materials like opals, natural iridescence is observed, due to packed silica spheres in the nanometre range,
uniform in size and arranged in layers. This provides appropriate conditions for interference.
In the case of butterflies and moths, the iridescence is produced in a peculiar way. Scientist have studied the
structure of the Morpho rhetenor in details and have found that these are formed of rows of scales arranged like
tiles in a roof. Each scale is about 70x200 µm and has a smaller structure on its surface, a very intricate and highly
ordered nanometre organization of ridges. Each ridge is about 800 nm wide. The spaces between them form a
natural photonic crystal that can generate constructive and destructive interference. The SEM analysis of the cross
section of the ridges on the wings shows and even more intricate structure that look like evergreen trees (last
image in Figure 10).
Figure 10. Close‐ up views at progressive magnification of the Morpho rhetenor showing the scales, which
mignified show photnic crystal structure, which in turn show a cross section displaying satea that look like
evergreen trees. (Images credit: (far left): Wiki Commons, Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0; (all
other images): S.Yoshioka, Osaka University, NISE Network, reprinted under NISE network terms and
conditions)
These are called satae, are about 400 nm long, and are responsible for producing constructive interference in the
blue wavelengths which generate the strong blue colour (Figure 11).
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Figure 11. The blue colour of the wings are due to the constructive
interference of light generated by the photonic crystal in the wings
structure (Image credit: F. Nijhout, Duke University, NISE Network,
reprinted under NISE network terms and conditions)
A photonic crystal is a periodic nanostructure that can modify the passage of light. The refractive indices
of the materials that make up the crystal, and the presence of cavities or other defects determine which
frequencies of light can propagate well.
In computing, propagation of light (rather than electrons) is being investigated as an alternative to
current integrated circuits. Photonics and photonic crystals in particular are described Chapter 4 of
Module 2 (“Application of Nanotechnologies: ICT”).
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